Episode Transcript
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welcome back to forbid
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knows new some your host chris matthews
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i want to welcome to the so randall corals the
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master builder and architectural design
3:57
or teacher geometry shin
4:00
mythology us geological explorer
4:02
an independent scholar is
4:04
nearly five decades of study research and
4:07
expiration into the interface between
4:09
ancient mysteries and modern science he
4:11
has been an actor freemason for over four years
4:13
in as a pass master of why the oldest and largest
4:16
masonic lodges in georgia is
4:18
unrecognisable national science teacher association
4:20
for his commitment to science education for young
4:22
people there's work incorporates ancient
4:25
mythology astronomy earth science
4:27
paleontology symbolism
4:29
sacred geometry and architecture
4:32
geomancy and other arcane
4:34
scientific traditions for
4:36
over thirty years he has presented classes
4:38
lectures and multimedia programs synthesizing
4:41
this information for students of the mysteries
4:44
is aspiration to affect to affect
4:46
of lost all his towards the goal of creating
4:49
the new world based upon universal principles
4:51
of harmony freedom and spiritual evolution
4:54
this across and welcome how are you doing night
4:57
on , very well chris thanks for having me
5:00
me thank you so much for joining us is going to be
5:02
also really been looking forward to speaking with you
5:05
you research really covers some of my
5:07
favorite topics hidden history
5:09
ancient cataclysms called mysteries
5:12
and so much more and since you know
5:14
this is your first time on i'd
5:16
love to hear a little bit about
5:18
would really got to first
5:21
off into freemason we and was it
5:24
the involvement in freemasonry
5:26
that got you interested
5:28
in ancient mysteries and cataclysms
5:31
or was it the other way around it
5:33
was the other way around
5:35
i
5:37
i got interested in
5:39
start getting very interested in earth's history
5:42
right outta high school pretty much i
5:46
spent a lotta time in the outdoors hiking
5:48
traveling around
5:50
and camping out day
5:52
and
5:54
generally be by ninety by a
5:56
take couple of years out of high school i said spam
5:59
you know
5:59
there's are in rocky mountains
6:02
and in utah in washington
6:04
state see in idaho the
6:07
and i got really interested
6:09
in geology about that time
6:11
and versus being late sixties early
6:13
seventies was also very interesting time
6:15
politically if you think
6:17
in terms of the spiritual evolution of the human
6:20
species on this planet it was kind of
6:22
a very interesting time because it was
6:24
a definitely a period of interplanetary
6:28
pollen is a sin i would sake
6:31
i would describe it as that because it was
6:33
a such an exchange of ideas
6:35
that was taking place during that
6:37
time ideas coming in from lots
6:40
of different cultures it up in a way
6:42
that it was unprecedented at that
6:44
time and plus all
6:46
the political upheavals the experimentation
6:49
and consciousness of was going on among
6:51
so many folks many there's a lot of things
6:54
forces and influences converging
6:57
at that particular time but so
6:59
are those things were kind of the
7:01
played their part as well
7:03
and i had
7:06
i had the i guess it's a the like to draw
7:08
to get exposed to some very interesting people
7:10
during that time that dot me
7:12
settings and awakened interest in some
7:15
of these subject matters
7:18
started to sixty nine seventy
7:20
seventy one seventy ,
7:22
and knows years is kinda where i really started
7:25
asking , of questions
7:27
you're looking at the world around me
7:29
and it really getting curious about
7:32
you know having the instinctive level that
7:34
whatever i had learned that there was a lot
7:36
more to the story
7:38
there
7:39
you know that sort of what the mainstream
7:42
was presenting that became obvious to me
7:44
even though i couldn't really formulated
7:46
to myself i couldn't necessarily
7:49
coherently sake through and okay
7:51
i know that dot you know the
7:55
way things are now is not the way things
7:57
always have been you know i
7:59
had learned geology at that point
8:01
to know that the idea behind
8:03
geology was that every thing
8:05
happened with this interminable slowness
8:08
gradually stickley arm and
8:12
you know it was coupled the idea geological
8:16
gradualism or uniformity was
8:18
also a couple very much with the ideas of
8:20
darwinian evolution it was
8:22
taking place very incrementally
8:25
not even noticeable from one generation
8:27
to the next but old cumulative
8:29
overly long periods of time
8:32
you would essentially get then
8:34
he would have a continuum india's have a species
8:36
at one end and a different species that the
8:38
other end of that continuum but the whole
8:40
process was was are very
8:43
it was it was almost in discernably
8:45
slow likewise with earth changes
8:48
and so those
8:50
were ideas that ideas kind of begin
8:52
to become aware of in of in
8:54
that this was farming a backdrop against
8:57
which all thinking about our own history
9:01
what's taking place and
9:03
the same time i looked at
9:06
i get very interested in in the whole question
9:08
of consciousness change and
9:12
as a consequence of that a sport a lotta
9:14
different traditions spiritual traditions religious
9:16
traditions you
9:19
know philosophical traditions
9:22
ideas about this about this first really
9:24
get started getting exposed to ideas
9:26
of eschatological the idea of the
9:28
end of the world kind of scenario
9:30
rights and having
9:33
spent a lot of time in a western states and
9:35
really and having grown up in rural minnesota
9:38
we spent a lot of time up and in northern minnesota
9:41
and do a lot of
9:43
a native americans up there and we used to go up
9:45
there and in
9:47
okay she was my grandfather and stuff know be a
9:49
lot of native americans and course i
9:51
didn't have a lot of interaction with them but i
9:53
knew that there was this other culture they are and
9:56
you know as i came of age i lived
9:59
in minneapolis
10:00
in nineteen seventy one during the
10:02
this the siege avast
10:05
it does
10:06
the pine ridge in south
10:08
dakota there was the wounded knee
10:11
whole situation and i
10:14
happened to be living within the native
10:16
american
10:17
section of minneapolis dot
10:19
on franklin avenue i have
10:21
they with a friend an apartment they are nice
10:24
would look out the window the apartment
10:26
out of the parking lot right on the other side of the parking
10:28
lot was the american indian movement headquarters
10:30
sauce
10:31
i
10:32
they added some of the dirt demonstrations were
10:34
them and went to some of the stuff and at that point
10:37
i kinda got exposed and get kind of got
10:39
interested in the culture of
10:41
the native american people and
10:44
down that led me into
10:48
going into some native american
10:50
mythology which i found
10:52
interesting because as because kid a kid just
10:54
orderly fascinated and obsessed
10:56
with
10:57
the biology reading the greek
10:59
myths and the the the nor smith's
11:02
particularly which is the stuff i had access
11:04
to so
11:05
or head is interested in myth emit interest
11:08
in mythology and then the
11:10
little bit of exposure that i had to native american
11:12
traditions american quickly saw
11:15
that they're worse parallels
11:20
surfer you inspired
11:23
curiosity i would say about
11:25
the parallels came about and
11:28
and damn then
11:31
i studied where they are a brahmin priest
11:33
there in
11:35
a d who was a sanskrit
11:37
professor to university of minnesota for two
11:39
years and studied meditation
11:41
and ah brom
11:44
, ritual which was very interesting
11:47
and threw him and threw
11:50
the himalayan swami swami rama
11:52
studied with him and learn
11:54
these techniques and traditions of
11:56
the shocker atari and atari succession
11:58
of masters and things
11:59
in some of the traditions of of yoga
12:02
and at which led me to
12:04
them reading into the evaders
12:08
so as irradiated of a
12:10
it is ah here
12:12
again for parallels
12:14
oh the stories you begin to see that
12:17
but what eventually after ten years of
12:19
of these kinds of exposures
12:21
i came to this realization that was
12:23
like each of these traditions was like you know
12:25
different fingers and you just
12:27
if you're just looking at the fingers you look for separate
12:30
fingers but really they're part of the same hand
12:32
see and that's kind of what of
12:35
what to to dawn on me it
12:37
it took ten years before enough
12:39
pieces fell into place and
12:42
in the summer nineteen seventy two
12:45
i was with this group we were a a
12:48
it was a yoga group studying under this
12:50
brahmin priest with the
12:53
who was in turn studying
12:56
under swami ,
12:58
and we bought land in northern
13:01
minnesota in the in the woods up there and
13:03
we we there was an architect
13:05
into group in he was very much inspired
13:07
by work of buckminster fuller if
13:09
you ever heard of buckminster fuller he was buckminster
13:12
the was a man was hearsay later yeah
13:14
yeah clicked on so anyways
13:16
he designed a couple of don't
13:20
structures based upon part
13:22
fuller geometry and one of them
13:24
was a melding of fuller's geometry
13:26
with concepts from islamic
13:29
geometry and so my
13:31
father
13:33
was a builder carpenter builder
13:35
who built many houses and in this
13:37
group there was myself and my two younger brothers
13:39
and between , three
13:42
of us we had most of the carpentry building
13:44
experience so
13:47
when it went time to build these
13:49
two buckner these two fuller
13:51
domes up in minnesota northerner
13:53
soda sort of we got drafted
13:56
to be i guess you'd say lead carpenters
13:59
and so then and
13:59
figuring out how to build
14:02
these things using the geodesic
14:04
geometry
14:06
i got very very interesting and stimulating
14:08
which led me into a study buckminster
14:10
fuller and buckminster fuller
14:12
geometry his work and synergetic
14:16
so we built these two are dogs
14:19
and one of i'm the one that was particularly
14:21
influenced by the design of an islamic
14:23
mosque was featured in a national
14:26
publication called shelter which
14:28
i think it's sit right on my
14:30
yelp over there i might grab it if we have
14:32
a break or something but anyway since was featured
14:35
in this in this book shelter which
14:37
was a book that was
14:40
the
14:41
presenting a either ideas
14:43
of of building and design and architecture
14:46
from all of these married cultures around
14:49
the world right i mean
14:52
anything you could possibly take up would have been
14:54
in there you know from here it's tough you
14:56
know to to teepees to
14:59
the rate even a glue something that was covered
15:01
the whole gamut of shelters
15:04
that people lived in but not only
15:06
lived in but also worship the and and
15:08
worked in and so on so this
15:12
thing this project that we belt was
15:14
featured in their publication and it was
15:16
given was whole page right up and it was it was
15:18
oversized lastly
15:21
for his slickly produced publication
15:24
and of course because course handiwork
15:26
was featured in arrived in there in procured
15:28
a copy of it and once
15:31
i got and i started reading into the history of
15:33
architecture in these all these different
15:35
manifestations and there
15:37
was some treatments sundance have
15:39
some of the proportion systems that were used
15:42
in some of the geometry the principles of geometry
15:45
that were used
15:47
the develop these these tablets in these
15:50
patterns or whether it was
15:53
you know a gothic cathedral or is it
15:55
in islamic mascara are mascara
15:58
buddhist temple
15:59
what was interesting was that there was
16:02
similarities in their execution
16:04
in your design in their conception even though
16:06
they might have manifested materially
16:09
very i'm very distinctly
16:12
obviously if you look at a buddhist temple linked
16:14
in thailand cambodia compared
16:17
to an egyptian temple you if you
16:19
know you're not going to have any mistaking which mistaking
16:21
which are you rights think about
16:23
think about temple a a buddhist
16:26
temple in cambodia and
16:28
and in egyptian temples okay they all look
16:30
very differ don't i mean you'd have no
16:33
trouble distinguishing this is
16:35
great as opposed to egyptian
16:37
right
16:38
in in your come into native american you can
16:40
look at our into the americas
16:42
and you've got my m culture mayan temple
16:44
it's and and again the same say
16:46
you're in a mayan temple has a very
16:49
distinct outer manifestation
16:52
but underlying all of these
16:54
there's a sort of a com and temple
16:57
and this is kind of what i became
16:59
aware of by
17:01
in this book shelter and it was
17:03
first place i really ever in that i can
17:05
recall encountered the idea of the golden
17:07
six it gave a little
17:10
brief description of the golden section and
17:12
how was derived geometrically that
17:14
this was nineteen seventy three wind
17:16
up when the book came out so by
17:18
, from the time i got outta high school
17:21
and sixty nine to nineteen seventy
17:23
three is when really
17:25
dc actress all solidify they
17:27
should attend the geometry came in near the
17:29
building because i've since that time that
17:31
was seventy four was when i
17:34
really began in
17:36
the construction industry seventy
17:38
sixers when i went on my own established
17:40
my own
17:41
business and then during
17:44
the eighties is when i joined forces
17:47
with my brother and we became a design build
17:50
the people would come to us dot
17:52
i target in the seventies the
17:55
engineering courses and drafting courses
17:57
to learn how to do geometric drawing
17:59
the i could draw plants so
18:02
that was the launching of the of the business end
18:04
of it but i continued my studies and all
18:06
of these various areas that doesn't interest
18:09
me i did
18:11
though i get i went to college for but
18:13
three years i'm majoring
18:16
in geology with some classes
18:18
in astronomy and mathematics
18:20
primarily but i'd have to confess
18:23
i'm a drop out i
18:25
had had going on and having
18:27
a business
18:29
but my purpose in studying geology
18:32
was not
18:33
looking for on a career
18:37
you know a neat freak with government or in
18:39
the energy industry only a that might
18:42
my
18:43
i'm majoring in geology
18:46
was because of might interest in earth's
18:48
history as an avocation i
18:50
already had already vocation
18:52
right what i had was in
18:55
my spare time
18:57
i didn't do a lot of the things that you know quote
18:59
unquote normal people do like they
19:01
didn't watch much tv i i
19:04
didn't have a lot of interest in sports others
19:07
and my own activities being
19:09
out hiking and things like that primarily
19:11
swimming and canoeing those are the
19:13
things i like to do but that didn't
19:15
require a lot of time and
19:17
of course when you're hiking and you are
19:19
sitting geology
19:21
the to can go hop the hand in hand
19:23
you know you could you can kill two birds
19:25
with one stone
19:26
so
19:29
that's kind of the the background of a growing up
19:31
in rural minnesota even early
19:33
on i got very interested
19:35
in we had
19:37
to set it as a tremendously clear
19:40
sky at night back in the fifties
19:42
when i was a little kid and
19:44
member many times my dad my being
19:46
out at night you know when i'm learning
19:48
to identify the star sites yeah
19:51
probably from the age of seven i did
19:53
quickly identify polaris and know
19:55
my way norse you know i
19:57
knew how to find the big dipper from the big dipper
19:59
i could
19:59
polaris but then it went beyond bad
20:02
i should know cassiopeia and
20:04
then awry and and end of the
20:06
the tar a taurus the bull so
20:08
the ice your i got to love of the stars
20:11
in astronomy and then
20:13
when i was nine for my birthday
20:16
maybe it was christmas i don't remember which my
20:18
mother gave me that a subscription
20:20
to the all about book club in
20:23
every month
20:24
the new book would come at it might be
20:26
one month all about electricity
20:28
the next month's all about reptiles
20:31
next month all about the planets
20:33
in every month i would wait the you
20:35
know with anticipation i would get the book
20:37
in that i would devour usually within a
20:40
few days
20:41
those part of it having having your
20:44
family's was supportive of yeah
20:46
the of the mind
20:49
you know my dad was an independent guy work
20:51
for himself him and my grandfather had
20:53
a company together carlson and sun
20:55
and they designed and built about two
20:58
hundred houses so growing
21:00
, around the building in the construction
21:03
you know i have lots of the toys i played
21:05
with were as a kid were blocks
21:07
that both my dad and my grandfather would make
21:09
block sets likes my father
21:11
would make interlocking blocked
21:13
sets that you know he would more distant
21:16
ten and these pieces pieces together
21:18
and all kinds of ways to produce
21:21
different kinds of buildings and shapes
21:23
and things like that i'm sad
21:26
lot of those kind of toys which i think new
21:28
know in retrospect are now that have lot
21:30
to do with it because you
21:32
know when you're four five six years old
21:34
and those are you are lot of the toys are
21:36
playing with playing addition to the regular toys
21:39
good sadness the fifties which was
21:42
things you know i'm anyway
21:44
so that's kind of it you know grown up outside
21:47
the one other thing i will mention
21:49
we grew up which was northwest of minneapolis
21:52
was right on the margin of
21:55
the
21:55
the superior lobe
21:58
of the lauren tied ice sheet
21:59
so where we lived
22:02
the was reckless minnesota has fifteen
22:05
thousand glacier
22:07
lake right just a great
22:09
glaciers came down over minnesota wisconsin
22:12
and when they received it back and they melted
22:15
they laugh
22:16
you know
22:17
thousands and thousands of lakes which are
22:19
basically the meltwater puzzle puddles
22:22
we had land on one
22:24
of those little meltwater puddles that was
22:26
therefore my will widen not quarter mile
22:28
wide and three quarters of my along side
22:31
group
22:32
pretty much right on their plate
22:34
fourteen it's vicinity
22:36
so ah
22:38
one of the things was that where
22:40
we lived was right where the margin
22:43
of the icy was so in periods of expansion
22:46
we would have been under the ice and
22:48
had periods of recession we would have
22:50
been exposed and so for tens of thousands
22:52
of years we read this in
22:54
this region where that
22:56
would be regular glacial encroachments
22:59
and in recession so the whole landscape
23:01
was shaped
23:03
hi
23:04
the glaciers and the presence of these glaciers
23:06
so early , i met my
23:09
i think with my dad showed me a picture of in
23:11
a book that was was was
23:13
from a was a picture
23:15
show a showing illustrations of
23:17
what the i see to unlock i am seven
23:19
or eight years old and say well this
23:21
was you know where we lived know and so one
23:24
of the places we used to go regularly
23:27
as a kid one for weekend outings
23:29
was on the st croix river which
23:31
forms the border between minnesota
23:33
and wisconsin and there's
23:35
, place up there called interstate park
23:38
and i don't think was called us back then but
23:40
we used to go there and it was basalt
23:43
outcrops next to in this where
23:45
the net river valley narrows and are
23:47
some basalt outcrops there's
23:49
that the surface of these outcrops or maybe
23:52
sixty seventy feet above the river
23:54
river we should go there is kids and i'm what
23:57
makes these place unique as these place of
23:59
giant potholes
24:01
round holes that are drilled
24:04
into the bedrock and
24:06
i'm never going to are particularly my grandmother
24:08
my grandmother my dad side like that place and
24:10
we would go up there with i would go with her and dot
24:13
in my grandfather
24:15
it was
24:16
she would explain that was made by water
24:19
you know when the when
24:21
there were glaciers suicide lot more water
24:23
and a traded these particles and things
24:26
and then there was some
24:28
the places i've told the story but in nineteen
24:30
sixty nine there was a out on
24:32
the young where the minnesota river
24:34
right there south minneapolis near
24:37
minneapolis saint paul minnesota
24:39
river in the mississippi river converge
24:41
and i'm frank and i'm not
24:43
and big fan of bee jay's also club
24:45
super low gas prices i don't trust things
24:48
that low started in ninety two big
24:50
office christmas party come on join
24:52
the limbo line now line see a chiropractor
24:54
so no bee jay's i
24:57
don't want super low gas prices okay
24:59
then but if you'd like super low gas prices
25:01
and gas forty dollar digital bee jay's gift card
25:03
join card new bee jay's wholesale club opening
25:05
soon a new albany visit be days or com
25:08
slash new albany when the beaches membership center
25:10
on north hamilton road limited time offer new
25:12
members only in the heat of the moment
25:14
you're not just keeping a com your
25:16
tv in it cool
25:17
i've gone cold brew and not just
25:20
any cold brew but one that slow seat
25:22
and mix with brown sugar and molasses
25:24
flavor with , cold foam infused
25:26
with brown sugar coolness and a cinnamon
25:29
sugar sprinkle on top top
25:31
keeping a calm cool and
25:34
cold brewed with duncan zoo brown
25:36
sugar green cold brew america runs
25:38
on the brakes and participate in
25:40
me very limited time offer terms applies
25:43
to the west of there is a
25:45
flat theory on a bluff looking
25:47
above the minnesota river valleys
25:50
the bluffs about two hundred feet
25:52
there about two hundred foot high bluffs
25:55
and the river valley in this one place
25:57
called up
25:58
called eden prairie
25:59
there's an airport do he and the
26:02
used to have
26:03
just outside the airport back in
26:06
the summers in the late sixties they would
26:08
have
26:08
set up a stage out the field and they would have rock
26:11
concerts
26:12
there
26:14
i went to have no idea probably local
26:16
bad item
26:17
the would remember who is planar but you know
26:20
though they're here the rock concerts and
26:22
three or four different occasions in summer sixty
26:25
nine and once nineteen sixty nine one
26:27
of these occasions i a break
26:29
into music or whatever i wandered off
26:32
away from the crowd is gathered
26:34
under the flat areas of the flat
26:37
at the top of these blocks that's why there's such other
26:39
there's a mean our our county airport
26:42
right there but , wandered away
26:44
and and walked over to the edge of the bluff
26:46
and i was looking out over the minnesota
26:48
river valley and three miles
26:50
away in the distance you could see there was another
26:52
set of bluffs
26:54
right and then
26:57
down in the valley below me
26:59
the modern minnesota river rights
27:02
and as i'm looking now at the
27:05
minnesota river in exploring and and
27:07
it it's there's a bank on either
27:09
side the little are
27:12
you know vertical displacement and
27:14
then a flat area kind of a flood plain
27:16
area and there's the river right and
27:18
i'm looking at that and then
27:20
looking at i'm sitting
27:23
at his bluff and i'm looking at us opposite blas
27:26
and
27:27
i got this serves
27:29
that looks like a little version of what i'm seeing
27:32
here
27:33
it was a it was a vague sense
27:35
of scale invariance
27:38
i had no idea what
27:41
the of the concept of scale and variants
27:43
at that time but it was just this
27:45
this in the it was it a very distinct
27:47
impression that i had that
27:50
stay with me
27:52
still to this day i think about it even to the point
27:54
where about three or four years ago was back in minnesota
27:57
and i went ass with found i
27:59
think it was the say
27:59
spark it was sitting
28:02
when i saw that
28:04
in the interim
28:05
though apparently it had been logged
28:08
off sometime before
28:10
the time that i
28:12
the for nineteen sixty nine became
28:14
and is considerably grub the whole
28:16
valley had grown over there were now it was
28:19
green and forested and it was some development
28:22
in there so the striking
28:24
similarity between the small
28:26
and the large was no longer
28:28
was obvious as it was sixty
28:32
nine but nonetheless
28:34
that was candidate in i would say growing
28:36
up
28:37
in a rural environment with a lot of
28:39
i'm out spend outdoors ah
28:42
, where a lot of it started and then then
28:45
a voracious reader from an early age
28:47
and be interested in these kinds of subject
28:49
so those are canada
28:52
the the foundation
28:54
stones of
28:55
everything i could kind of doing since has been
28:58
following in those pathways
29:01
yeah that's that's really
29:03
club meeting the sub pretty interesting places
29:06
definitely sounds like a boy a definitely
29:08
sounds like it i mean that's that's a fascinating
29:12
bio , lie so far far
29:14
know when we're talking about ancient cataclysms
29:17
i've cataclysms i've mainly
29:20
similar researchers that i've had on you know the most
29:22
important date as deal twelve thousand
29:25
and twelve thousand five hundred years ago
29:27
there's a major cataclysm that reset everything
29:30
but there's evidence of multiple
29:33
major cataclysms that could have been complete
29:35
resets throughout history right
29:37
absolutely absolutely there's evidence
29:39
of multiple catastrophes now
29:42
amongst catastrophes
29:43
the twelve thousand eight hundred twelve thousand nine
29:46
hundred i think is what we would what is now
29:48
usually be referred to as the younger dries boundaries
29:50
that one does stand out it's
29:53
probably the most i would think
29:56
it's almost certainly
29:58
the most catastrophic
29:59
revamped of the last three to five
30:02
million years and but
30:04
that's not say the to i mean never been there was about
30:06
major bronze age catastrophe that
30:08
could have
30:10
reduce the global population by
30:12
more than half maybe
30:14
three quarters there
30:17
but other contenders catastrophe at about
30:19
eight thousand three hundred years ago where there was a
30:21
global ah suddenly
30:23
the temperature dropped precipitously
30:26
in a very quick short period
30:28
of time right , the middle actually
30:31
of the what's called higher holocene optimum
30:33
climatic optimum which was
30:35
the media posts glacial era which was
30:37
actually quite warm up to
30:39
one to three degrees warmer
30:42
the under current warm period that worrying which
30:44
is a well established by
30:46
scientific studies projects scientific
30:49
studies from that time including
30:51
evidence of higher sea levels including
30:53
levels of
30:56
boreal forests are
30:58
shifting their rangers plants
31:00
that grow at altitudes you know
31:03
the able to grow three hundred four hundred
31:05
eight hundred feet higher the negro
31:07
now
31:09
multiple lines of evidence of
31:11
have converged on and on the idea that
31:13
the holocene climatic optimal month optimum
31:16
was warmer than now
31:18
okay but then we had
31:21
pure a period that looks like it was a very
31:23
are catastrophic disruption at about
31:25
eleven thousand six hundred years ago when
31:28
the younger drivers terminated there
31:30
, also what appears to been to
31:32
a catastrophic episode at fourteen
31:34
thousand six hundred years ago so
31:37
the the pleistocene
31:39
holocene transition that took place
31:42
that was who's
31:44
most obvious outward manifestation
31:46
was the shift from a glacial global
31:49
glacial environment to a global interglacial
31:51
environment really took
31:53
place over about three thousand years
31:57
the first episode and about
31:59
fourteen
31:59
there's and it apparently involves
32:02
when i say fourteen six i mean fourteen thousand six
32:04
hundred years ago which apparently involved
32:06
a very rapid and accelerated
32:09
melting of the great ice sheets on
32:12
, then that was followed by a
32:14
relatively gradual warming that
32:16
was pretty much consistent with them along to
32:18
bitch aging orbital
32:20
geometries between earth and sun but
32:23
, not was interrupted at about two between
32:25
twelve thousand eight hundred and twelve thousand nine hundred
32:28
years ago ago another advantage
32:30
apparently produced pass some
32:32
very catastrophic melting but
32:35
also associated with some
32:37
the major fire
32:39
are there
32:40
incendiary of amazon or perhaps
32:42
see them global scale and
32:45
dot that was where
32:46
wanted a major episodes of
32:48
megafon like stinks it's took place
32:51
was at this younger dry as boundary and boundary
32:53
and that was the inception of the younger driest
32:56
the termination of the under driest
32:58
was another
33:00
catastrophic period so
33:02
see those three alone the
33:05
the the cumulative consequence
33:07
of those three events was
33:10
sea level the total sea level rise
33:13
of about four hundred c
33:16
a major shift of biomes around
33:18
the planet the disappearance of about six
33:20
million cubic miles of ice on
33:23
which is what caused the sea level rise
33:25
or the extinction of about half
33:28
of all animal species over one hundred
33:30
pounds of body weight
33:31
globally arm the
33:33
collapse of the clovis culture
33:37
major the temperature shifts
33:40
there was
33:41
it was a hell of a time
33:44
our universe is incredible
33:46
surrounded by mystery and beauty
33:49
and many others have questions about
33:51
our past present and future
33:55
october harlem is an intuitive medium
33:57
with over twenty years of experience
34:00
he had assisted people with discovering
34:02
their pass by understanding their
34:04
pass and connected the living
34:07
to their loved ones who have made
34:09
the transition she
34:11
is currently offering readings through skype
34:14
zoom facetime
34:16
phone and in person you
34:19
can reach her at the ancient gift to
34:21
gift to to gmail dot com
34:25
the you think that one was caused by a
34:27
an asteroid impact well
34:29
didn't
34:30
the asteroid signature is
34:33
very strong at the twelve thousand
34:35
eight hundred twelve thousand nine hundred i'll say
34:37
the top point a twelve point nine the
34:40
younger driest boundary the inception of
34:42
the us the asteroid signature is very
34:44
very dominant there
34:47
i've not seen any convincing
34:49
evidence that there is an asteroid signature
34:51
of eleven thousand six hundred or the fourteen
34:54
thousand six hundred so
34:56
i'm open to the idea of
34:58
the a solar of
35:00
kind of event that that robert shock talks
35:03
about
35:04
robert his peers i
35:07
don't he may have modified his viewpoint now
35:09
he was initially are supportive
35:11
of the emit the im impact
35:13
hypothesis impact hypothesis that it might
35:16
have been a key actually a comet
35:19
then he abandoned add idea
35:22
and went full bore
35:23
or are solar of and
35:26
but ah
35:29
you may have might have a because at one
35:31
point the window the the impact
35:33
of evidence was first proposed
35:35
it was attacked by there
35:38
are factions that them
35:40
were very much opposed to it on
35:43
that marshaled ah the mainstream
35:45
press don't try to denounce the
35:47
ideas because
35:50
in retrospect what you see is that the factions
35:52
up opposing you're also tended
35:55
to be supporters of the
35:57
ah the so called blitzkrieg
35:59
the hypothesis the
36:02
the human
36:03
overkill
36:04
hunting hypothesis that the megafauna
36:08
when state primarily a result of
36:10
older hunting by humans and
36:13
, ideas been around for decades and
36:15
decades it it's sort of started falling
36:18
out of favor or in the
36:20
sixties and seventies
36:23
for multiple reasons which we could go into
36:25
if you want but
36:27
with the politicization piloted
36:29
politicization of science it has taken
36:31
place in the last few decades one
36:35
of the things now that is
36:36
part and parcel of the whole global
36:39
warming
36:40
scenario is the sixth grade mass
36:42
extinction scenario that
36:45
would you say sixth graders referring
36:47
to rid of five great mass extinctions
36:50
in earth's history the
36:52
late or division the devonian
36:55
the permian triassic the the
36:57
terminal jurassic the cretaceous tertiary
37:00
indies advance were for
37:02
us found least catastrophic
37:05
the global biosphere and the global
37:07
environment
37:09
in ways i mean if you take the cretaceous
37:11
tertiary the considered right in
37:13
the middle of the five in terms of severity
37:16
come on your global firestorms
37:19
you had months of darkness you
37:21
add alternating first you had a global
37:23
cosmic winter
37:25
rapidly replaced by a super
37:28
heated environment you had acidic
37:30
oceans you had acid rain
37:32
on a global scale i mean the
37:34
conflicts months of destructive forces
37:36
at the end of the of the cretaceous
37:40
period this is almost difficult
37:42
to even imagine
37:44
we are not
37:46
like this picture that i took behind me here's
37:48
a very typical day on earth today we
37:50
don't see darkness we
37:52
don't see the trillions
37:54
of tons of acidic material
37:57
in the atmosphere
37:59
i mean beat the snot
38:02
to say that humans aren't having an impact on
38:04
the goblin by we certainly are of
38:06
course we are
38:08
what we are you now is not comparable
38:11
the great five it's not even remotely
38:13
comparable it's not comparable to what happened even
38:15
at the end of the last ice age in
38:17
terms of what was going on in
38:20
the environment because
38:23
so
38:25
the idea of the six race mass extinction
38:28
this now coupled with the idea of climate
38:30
change so we're causing climate
38:32
change the climate is driving the sixth
38:34
grade mass extinctions and
38:37
with if someone questions
38:39
the scenario the the
38:41
typical response was and here's here's
38:43
the connection is that while look there's already
38:45
a precedent for humans causing
38:48
a mass extinctions look at what happened
38:50
to the megafauna to under the ice age right
38:53
, your exhibit a right
38:55
so you have factions that are sort
38:57
of
38:58
centering around this idea
39:01
that humans were responsible for
39:03
this great mass extinction at
39:05
the end of the ice age and therefore this provides
39:08
a precedent for what is
39:10
happening now
39:11
so
39:13
those factions did
39:16
not want to let go the idea
39:18
so when you bring in a common and
39:20
some type of an externally triggered
39:22
global catastrophe
39:24
they didn't want to go there and so
39:27
they
39:28
basically you know martial therefore
39:30
sister tried to suppress the heresy and
39:33
it's it's very interesting study
39:36
of of how they did it and how
39:38
it sounds convincing
39:41
when you read and i've gone through all of the papers
39:43
on the younger darius events very
39:46
thoroughly
39:48
pro and con and
39:51
it was it it's really out the
39:53
the ones who were opposed to the idea
39:56
it's very much a sleight of hand kind of
39:58
thing which which we see
40:00
going on right now and a bunch of different forms
40:03
rights but very much
40:05
very prevalent in his and because of the fact
40:07
that i had it's donald had a lot
40:09
of background study in a the state
40:11
since i've read hundreds of papers
40:13
on the megafon like states it's my
40:16
interest interest i suits goes back you know thirty
40:18
to forty years be i've got some
40:20
geological background those
40:23
kind of studies really kinda prepared
40:25
me to look at this
40:27
look at the
40:28
the attempts to rebut
40:31
the refute
40:33
the impact i paused assists
40:36
and
40:37
i could see through mike i mean i
40:39
can see the sleight of hand that was going on
40:41
since in it would be things like this
40:43
okay so you , the
40:45
pro or column the the celestial
40:47
the pro cosmic impact group goes
40:50
out and collects some samples
40:52
city under darius boundary boundary
40:54
go back in a examine these
40:57
samples for impact proxies
41:00
right now let's say that the impact proxies are
41:02
my christie rolls or nano diamonds
41:05
right now you , a picture if there's
41:07
if there's an impact in you have these incredible
41:10
pressures and heat heat it produces
41:12
out of the vapor literally out of the vapor
41:15
itself these diamonds these
41:17
and they fall to the earth by the
41:20
trillions right but their narrow
41:22
diamonds means you can't see him except
41:24
with a high powered up electron
41:26
microscope right so
41:29
they fall in a litter and the landscape
41:31
right now twelve thousand years
41:33
goes by right you've got if they if they
41:36
fall on fall forest are going to be you know go
41:38
down under forest floor and
41:40
you can have
41:41
material accumulating you
41:43
can have slugs you can have a rosy
41:45
you could have deposition you can have all these processes
41:48
going not so in some cases this
41:51
horizon that was the lamb surface
41:53
receive these nano diamonds it's gone in
41:56
other places it's buried right now
41:59
last
41:59
the
42:00
or worse
42:02
october i went to the murray
42:04
spring site right down or
42:07
just north of the mexican border in southern
42:09
arizona this is one of the areas where the
42:11
black matt was prominently
42:13
displayed hour after a better we can
42:15
pull up and i can show you pictures of the black maps
42:18
know the black map separates the pleistocene
42:20
below the holocene above it
42:23
marks the boundary of the
42:25
younger drives and it's in this
42:27
black man where the charcoal is found
42:29
where the the nano diamonds are found
42:31
where the micro spirits are found where the magnetic
42:34
greens are found with the iridium layer
42:36
is found where the platinum spite of sound
42:39
not all of these things these things of the places
42:41
by any means but all of these things
42:43
have been sound
42:45
one place or another associate
42:48
with their bound
42:49
right
42:50
the law that boundary
42:52
mega fauna above that boundaries
42:55
hardly any megafauna in north
42:57
america below that boundary clovis
42:59
culture above that boundaries
43:01
clovis culture gone right
43:04
so now the idea is you
43:06
have these people who are
43:08
invested in this picture
43:11
of humans rampaging over the landscape
43:13
slaughtering everything the
43:16
pathway so quickly that
43:18
from the bering strait
43:20
in alaska all the way down to tierra del
43:22
fuego
43:23
these animals couldn't escape this
43:25
the
43:26
rampage in barbaric slaughter
43:28
of these advancing hordes of flotus
43:31
people
43:32
right and there's our press
43:35
okay here too we can invoke that whenever
43:37
somebody questions the capacity
43:39
of humans to cause a great
43:41
mass extinction we have that
43:43
to invoke now your company's of
43:45
starts i know know that looks like
43:47
it was something from out there
43:50
adrian like there you see and
43:53
so they closed ranks they wrote
43:55
ranks series of articles
43:57
for example wanted to suppose
43:59
a few days and was they went out they collected
44:02
samples they , back and
44:04
they analyzed know samples and they didn't
44:06
find anything anything now this
44:08
is published in depressed independent depressed
44:11
look it's at look at the younger driest boundary
44:14
don't find any impact proxies
44:16
therefore there was no impact right so
44:19
now the growing team of
44:22
proponents they go back out there they
44:24
look at the protocols of
44:26
the groups that were setting
44:28
out to refute
44:30
the impact hypothesis and
44:32
what they discoveries
44:34
multiple
44:35
the transgressions if you will
44:37
have the proper protocols for example
44:40
you got is very thin layer
44:42
right and if you don't
44:44
was select your sample from exactly the
44:46
right place
44:48
course you're not going to find a thing are
44:50
you
44:51
well the the the proponents
44:53
of who are some movies really big
44:56
hitters in the scientific world
44:58
actually
44:59
geologists in astronomers
45:01
and archaeologist said and
45:04
done
45:04
people like that
45:06
james chen it was written over five hundred
45:09
scientific papers published
45:11
in the peer reviewed literature
45:14
corporate a prime example okay
45:17
these guys showed
45:19
that the critics
45:21
of the impact hypothesis
45:23
after samples in around place
45:26
so if you take your sample from the wrong
45:28
place and you'd go back to the laboratory
45:30
you don't find anything well
45:32
that doesn't prove anything know
45:36
your , was too large their subs
45:38
size was the wrong size in other words you're talking
45:40
about nano diamonds when you save your material
45:43
you have to seven various to
45:46
the very small fraction rights
45:48
otherwise you know see you're you're basically
45:50
looking it's the needle in the haystack think you
45:53
know if you're so if you're haystack
45:55
is a huge amount
45:57
you know ten feet high and you gotta find
45:59
that needle is
45:59
the door amount of hey the sub of
46:02
a foot high you see so what they
46:04
did was the zip size of the sample
46:06
size was two big there since the said
46:08
sizes too big
46:10
so when they said the stuff
46:12
they were looking you know
46:15
they had their doors too many
46:17
are your for example are tough
46:19
fungal steroids that that
46:22
occur naturally without any impact
46:24
but these are very difficult
46:26
to differentiate between the to new have to use
46:28
very
46:30
powerful microscopes the the news
46:32
right kind of microscopes to differentiate
46:34
between the the phone bill spheres spirits
46:37
and the the cosmic impacts
46:39
virals there was a lot of these protocols
46:42
that they didn't follow but the
46:44
result was is that day
46:46
three or four or five papers written
46:49
all based upon this faulty
46:52
hockey protocols
46:54
those papers claimed to refute
46:57
the impact i popped assists and
47:00
that was published drop the press that
47:03
oh that impaired prop hypothesis
47:05
has been disproven now
47:07
what they did was the of the proponents
47:09
came back and did it it
47:11
it it did motivate them to do really
47:14
really high quality work which
47:17
they then they had an independent
47:19
teams were inspired
47:21
to go and look in various places
47:24
so by o two
47:26
thousand and fifteen sixteen
47:28
emir you'd have aided dependent teams now
47:30
that it's found impact proxies
47:33
of various places north america
47:35
central america south america now
47:37
in africa and
47:40
in europe in syria
47:42
and
47:43
so the
47:45
basically the
47:47
the rebuttal has been rebutted now
47:50
so we're back to
47:51
however
47:53
there's not still a definitive explanation
47:55
about what
47:57
it's
47:58
was it a single event
48:00
that's one of the question was a multiple events was
48:02
it a single impactor which i don't take it was
48:04
i think it was multiple in pastors
48:06
which makes it to me more consistent
48:09
over take this as they did the direction the thinking
48:11
is going to more consistent with the idea
48:13
of a cometary swarm
48:16
the encounter in a commentary sworn probably
48:18
did was prior to the encountered
48:21
some point was part of a single nuclei
48:24
the desegregated overpriced
48:26
perhaps a succession of splitting
48:29
of ants but , created
48:31
a cluster of of cosmic debris
48:33
that the earth encountered in fact it may have been
48:36
even a repetitive encounter to this is now
48:38
possible that if you have have
48:41
t and r com it disintegrates
48:43
in a regular orbit that like a
48:46
in oh say and apollo asteroid type orbit
48:48
or in in orbit between earth and jupiter
48:50
where it could disintegrate and
48:53
then later it's orbit with the it's
48:55
the with which is the byproduct of
48:57
it's disintegration
48:59
the early stages of that disintegration
49:01
the material is into be cluster
49:04
i'm frank and i'm not a big fan of
49:06
bjs also club super low gas prices
49:08
i don't trust things that low started in
49:10
ninety two big office christmas party come
49:13
on join the limbo line now
49:15
i see a chiropractor so no
49:17
bee jay's i don't want super low gas
49:19
prices okay then but if you'd
49:22
like super low gas prices end up forty dollars
49:24
digital bee jay's gift guard join the new bee jay's
49:26
wholesale club opening soon in new albany
49:28
visit bee jay's dot com slash new albany or
49:30
the bjs membership center on north hamilton road
49:32
limited time offer a new members only
49:34
if you to be concentrated in
49:36
areas but then as time
49:38
goes on that cluster begins to defuse
49:41
it begins to spread out along
49:43
the orbit however in the early
49:45
stages of break
49:47
the earth encountered a swarm did
49:50
it could explain
49:51
how you would have multiple impacts saw
49:54
almost simultaneously my
49:57
taking at this point is that it seems more
49:59
can
49:59
this that with a multiple impact event like
50:02
my own research suggests that there were between
50:04
seven and ten impacts of varying
50:06
sizes i'm enough
50:09
to
50:11
the release let's
50:14
say an equivalent of one thousand to
50:16
ten thousand megatons and of of
50:18
energy release and up and and
50:21
probably hundreds if not thousands
50:23
of much smaller
50:25
parents know when i say a smaller
50:27
impact i might be talking about something
50:29
in the one to ten for twenty
50:32
make a ton range which is about the equivalent
50:34
of one of your the us nuclear
50:37
weapon
50:38
roughly on the i you
50:41
know have you no doubt have heard of that and guscott
50:43
levant of nineteen a weight of course you
50:45
go
50:47
that to , i'm that are under
50:50
say that the most likely explanation
50:52
for that in my mind is that it was a member of the
50:54
toward meteor stream for the simple
50:56
reason it's early morning june thirtieth
50:58
nineteen oh wait is exactly
51:00
when when earth is crossing
51:03
the summer time towards right
51:05
when the toward stream has just
51:07
made it's para healy and passage around the
51:09
sun is now coming from the
51:11
direction of the of and
51:13
it's rate the radiant point that the
51:16
the eight most closely identified
51:18
radiant point based upon eyewitness
51:21
reconstructions places
51:23
it's point and the emergence from
51:25
the sky almost
51:27
consistent almost precisely
51:30
consistent with where the
51:32
toward media stream would have emerged from the
51:34
sky so not to watch it was in the right
51:36
place in the right time to be a member of the towards
51:38
streak that doesn't prove that it
51:40
was a member of the towards but it does certainly
51:43
make a very strong circumstantial
51:45
case right that that's what it was
51:48
and up oh
51:50
that's the , or crosses
51:52
the toward me to shrink twice each year once
51:55
in in late june early july
51:57
after , made pear a helium
51:59
which means it's closest passage
52:02
to the side that makes that it comes
52:04
in from the direction
52:06
the play eighties
52:09
which forms the shoulder of the boat
52:12
right in the ancient astrological conceptions
52:14
the pleiades is the shoulder the bulls and
52:17
so the bullet courses taurus and all
52:19
cometary streams and
52:21
meteor streams which are ultimately the
52:24
ah
52:25
the offspring of disintegrating comets
52:28
they are all named after the constellation
52:31
that occupies the portion
52:33
of the sky that they appear to emanate
52:35
from rights so the orion
52:38
it's are coming from the direction of awry
52:40
and the leah needs are coming from the
52:42
direction of lean towards from
52:44
toward the bolts new radiant point
52:46
of
52:47
the towards is very close to just
52:50
bull's eye right on the pleiades which
52:53
for me is always very interesting when you begin
52:55
to look at the mythology surrounding
52:57
the pleiades com and and
52:59
particularly how the pleiades have played a role
53:01
in a lot of very interesting
53:05
esoteric the cope
53:07
traditions
53:09
including freemasonry including
53:12
i miss ray as i'm including
53:14
basic traditions even including
53:16
jewish
53:18
the jewish legends are native
53:20
american traditions you know you find the pleiades
53:23
playing this very interesting central
53:25
role and particularly
53:27
and mistress i think that there's a very overt
53:30
connection between
53:33
the symbolism of the ball and
53:36
symbolism of the pleiades with
53:38
the the rituals of mets racism but
53:41
you know the know the the called seven sisters
53:43
and greek mythology worthy
53:45
the at ease my arm
53:47
right and in the hell are
53:49
these
53:51
the associated with the pleiades as well
53:54
and the
53:55
you know that the legends when you get into the legends
53:57
of the of the flood in him
53:59
and
53:59
and the destruction of the earth like him
54:02
in greek traditions you had the the
54:05
story of satan member the son of
54:07
haley also tried to drive his father's
54:09
chariot and to keep it within
54:11
the plane a the ecliptic so dared often
54:14
descended , to earth and set the earth
54:16
on fire and
54:19
finally jupiter had to mount the heavens
54:21
and her like great thunderbolt to chariot
54:24
and struck to chariot
54:26
and phaeton spell
54:28
flaming to earth and fell
54:31
into the river air adonis and two sisters
54:34
the hell yeah hell yeah these wept
54:36
it is demise and their tears
54:39
the great flood
54:41
so
54:42
right there you know in this codified form
54:44
when you talk about you mythology there's
54:46
a beautiful example
54:49
you mythology the idea that mists
54:52
contain actual
54:54
information is just codified
54:56
in different ways
54:58
but it's essentially telling the same stories
55:00
it is fascinating i want to go back though
55:03
to something you were saying that
55:05
, of piqued my interest about
55:07
you know and a possible next greek
55:09
cataclysm and you were saying
55:11
how there are certain factions that don't like to
55:13
admit that some of these are cosmically
55:15
caused caused recently
55:19
i think is the past couple years in
55:21
the mainstream media they were talking about
55:23
how are magnetic north pole is rapidly
55:25
moving towards siberia
55:28
and you know i've heard researchers
55:30
say that if it goes too far we could have a magnetic
55:33
reversal what
55:35
are you think the chances that we are approaching
55:38
another great cataclysm of some sort
55:40
some sort in own asteroid impact
55:43
or anything like that
55:45
well i think you know if if you start
55:47
paying attention of the cosmic environment
55:49
there are
55:50
typically close encounters about
55:52
once a month
55:54
and the question in my my does
55:56
always been are we seeing
55:59
more
55:59
cause we have the technological capability
56:02
to see and track things that we couldn't male
56:04
fifty years ago or
56:07
is it is it it
56:08
the flux of these things is actually
56:11
intensify or is
56:13
it a combination of both and at
56:15
this point we're going into the lot of the background
56:17
my
56:18
that is that it might be combination
56:20
of both i think that we have
56:23
actually seen an increase
56:25
an increase
56:27
flying by the earth
56:29
but in either case the point
56:31
is is when we start looking out into the
56:33
cause cosmic neighborhood that
56:36
our planet resides in we discovered that
56:38
know there's a lot of other the
56:41
inhabitants of this neighborhood lot
56:43
more than we imagined even a few decades
56:45
ago now , do we integrate
56:48
dad indoor thinking well what i
56:50
think that two things one
56:53
is that we are looking
56:55
at the earth in ways we were never
56:57
able to you know grant we have lied
57:00
are now ground penetrating radar we have
57:03
magnetic studies that
57:06
we have technologies for looking into
57:08
the earth and understanding the earth and looking
57:11
at the proxies are analyzing
57:13
your new dating methods that are allowing
57:16
us to create these chronologies of past
57:18
events of if we go
57:20
back a hundred years ago you
57:23
know as far as craters ,
57:25
astor blames which are the most direct
57:27
evidence of impact we were down to just
57:30
a few you know the very first one was
57:32
early that was identified as such
57:34
was meteor crater in arizona arizona
57:36
is the big obvious plastic whole
57:39
underground and that was not identified
57:41
as such until feel the early twentieth
57:43
century so you know if you go
57:45
back to the
57:47
realization that meteor crater
57:49
was an impact which it turned out to
57:51
be
57:52
in impact of an iron asteroid
57:54
and then you have the to use government of nineteen
57:56
away which was a much lower density
57:59
object
58:01
in other words the
58:03
the arizona meteor
58:06
crater object being and at ah
58:08
an iron asteroid probably had asteroid density
58:11
of least five or six grams per cubic
58:13
centimeter witches think about upholding
58:16
about piece of cast iron in your hands
58:18
the to do stopped it was probably more
58:20
like a the density of of
58:22
snowball or a nice que
58:25
it may be between one and two
58:27
was low density well as a consequence
58:30
the high density object couldn't quite
58:32
easily penetrate the full atmosphere and strike
58:34
the ground and leave
58:36
a big obvious whole
58:38
there are tens of thousands of years later the
58:40
lower density object
58:42
like to good good did not penetrate the atmosphere
58:45
you know it did not strike the
58:46
it blew up five or six
58:48
miles above the surface of the earth
58:52
and the shock wave of that
58:54
explosion then
58:56
moved out words in a in a radio
58:58
fashion in a wavefront moving outwards
59:02
and , pressures were so extreme
59:04
that when it intersected the ground just
59:06
essentially mode the old growth forests
59:08
down right and you had over
59:11
eight hundred square miles
59:13
seven billion trees that
59:15
were
59:16
that were just flat splayed
59:18
out from the episode
59:20
the shock wave right
59:23
now here here's the thing we
59:25
know that happened in two thousand and i mean
59:27
ninety nine something out
59:30
a smaller scale happened in my was
59:32
a two thousand and fourteen february
59:34
when i don't remember yes charles vitale
59:37
albums now
59:38
that was much smaller than to guscott
59:40
and yet
59:42
it was a very impressive event for
59:44
sure and throw tomatoes oh
59:46
yeah fifteen hundred buildings were damaged
59:49
in and oh yeah i mean if you
59:51
look at some of the i'm some of the
59:54
videos of the saying and this that
59:56
the the sound effects of when did the blast
59:58
wave hit
59:59
it's it's mind boggling
1:00:02
of neurons that's just a little cosmic
1:00:04
spec rights
1:00:06
ooh thanks to get ago if you
1:00:08
keep in mind first of all
1:00:11
when you look at the population
1:00:13
distribution of these different
1:00:15
types of objects from you know
1:00:17
the high density iron objects
1:00:19
to the low density
1:00:21
you know almost
1:00:22
snowball like objects the middle
1:00:25
the carbonation tried redux are kind
1:00:27
of right in the middle you know maybe about
1:00:29
the the same density if you picked up
1:00:31
a stone next to the river right
1:00:33
destined to be in the devil you gotta you've
1:00:35
gotta
1:00:36
the use of ice in one hand a super
1:00:39
a stone and the other and a piece of castile
1:00:42
right in your third hand try so
1:00:46
that represents the rate
1:00:48
of of possibilities right
1:00:50
now
1:00:51
when you go to the lower end of the spectrum
1:00:54
those can happen but don't leave
1:00:56
the kind of lasting
1:00:58
the buttons
1:00:59
there occurrence
1:01:01
like the iron asteroids or
1:01:03
even the the them the the the
1:01:05
more dance objects however
1:01:07
, the same chris the
1:01:09
objects that are towards the lower
1:01:12
density end of the spectrum are
1:01:14
anywhere from five to ten times more
1:01:16
abundant than the other end of the spectre
1:01:19
so if you start cradle counter
1:01:22
they are now there's pushing close to two hundred
1:01:24
traders
1:01:26
the surface of the earth has been identified
1:01:29
which are the scars of these
1:01:31
cosmic encounters you know
1:01:33
if if it's meteor crater it's
1:01:35
a big hole underground to crater if
1:01:37
it's covered over
1:01:39
and he only see it with with ground
1:01:41
penetrating technologies to know
1:01:43
that it's there or you see
1:01:46
some of the outcrops around was shot
1:01:49
courts or
1:01:51
impaired proxies in
1:01:53
but it's not an obvious crater it's called an astro
1:01:56
bleed which translates
1:01:58
as star moon
1:02:00
star wound so
1:02:03
given that there's about two hundred craters
1:02:06
and astra blames
1:02:08
yeah those are probably no more
1:02:11
than found on basically
1:02:13
fifteen percent of the earth's surface
1:02:15
because we've barely begun to see
1:02:19
you know
1:02:19
what's in the oceans your
1:02:22
the oceans comprise almost three quarters
1:02:24
of the earth's surface suffer every impact
1:02:26
on land
1:02:28
you're going to have three impacts into the ocean
1:02:31
right now any oceanic
1:02:34
impact is gonna be catastrophic the
1:02:36
lady impact is gonna be catastrophic
1:02:39
but they're going to be differ you
1:02:41
know they're going to be different one of the noise and oceanic
1:02:43
impact is going to do is it's going it's inject
1:02:46
tremendous amounts inconceivable
1:02:48
miles of water into the
1:02:50
atmosphere is going to cause
1:02:53
huge tsunami waves that will make
1:02:55
landfall ah
1:02:57
the area of the surrounding
1:03:00
continental areas or islands
1:03:02
you know good are in that particular ocean basins
1:03:05
the rain out of the injection
1:03:07
of water vapor into the atmosphere is going
1:03:10
to cause extreme
1:03:12
roll on to rachel rainfalls
1:03:14
much as all of the miss described
1:03:17
you know whether to the bible or whether
1:03:19
it's the hopi myths are you know
1:03:21
the evaded miss of their flood of you
1:03:23
know the sumerian miss have tremendous
1:03:26
intense prolonged rainfalls
1:03:29
we now know that that's totally fuck
1:03:31
plate
1:03:32
was able scientifically
1:03:34
right okay so here's so here's
1:03:36
we want to keep in mind is that oceanic
1:03:40
you perjured and be three times more
1:03:42
prevalent and land impacts right
1:03:45
now inland impacts are
1:03:48
our discovery is pretty much limited
1:03:51
to areas that areas for example there's
1:03:53
example lot of i'm found in canada and
1:03:55
in northern europe in scandinavian countries
1:03:58
astra blames right that
1:04:00
is be close
1:04:02
north western europe
1:04:04
have more than half of north america was covered
1:04:06
with great ice sheets and those ice
1:04:08
sheets they're able to remove
1:04:11
large sections of bedrock will
1:04:13
, doing so they expose what
1:04:15
would have otherwise made the hidden corps
1:04:18
for disaster blames blames
1:04:21
see you've got that then you got the occupied
1:04:23
areas where there has been more you
1:04:26
know studies of groundwater hydrology
1:04:28
more exploration for minerals and so forth
1:04:31
but you've got vast areas around
1:04:33
here quick the equator which are forested
1:04:36
it's you're just like right now as we speak
1:04:38
neat the the remains of tremendous
1:04:41
and you know cities structures
1:04:44
in the brazilian rainforest set of and sound
1:04:46
using lied are the nobody knew was there
1:04:49
right well now imagine that you got to even
1:04:51
you got further under into the bedrock
1:04:53
into find out
1:04:55
if there is asked to bleeps there
1:04:58
okay so be it you could figure
1:05:00
that if the two hundred astra bleeds
1:05:02
now identified you ,
1:05:05
take fifteen percent of the earth's surface
1:05:07
twenty percent season figure
1:05:09
five times more astra blames
1:05:11
are there are that have been
1:05:13
discovered
1:05:15
and on the lamp now
1:05:18
that makes close to a thousand then
1:05:20
you figure that of
1:05:23
that thousand
1:05:24
there probably is that many
1:05:26
preserved a various ages in the
1:05:29
planetary land under
1:05:32
the ocean new would be three times that
1:05:34
so now three thousand
1:05:37
if there's a thousand land impact that
1:05:39
means three thousand oceanic impacts
1:05:42
now
1:05:44
the worked have like four thousand potential
1:05:46
impacts throughout the period
1:05:49
from the paleozoic to the press now
1:05:52
all those bear in mind that
1:05:54
there's probably going to be something
1:05:57
like five times or ten times
1:05:59
more the impacts encounters
1:06:03
that are gonna be along
1:06:05
the lines of the to do school event
1:06:08
the meteor crater in arizona you
1:06:11
see what we're getting yeah
1:06:13
thousands upon thousands
1:06:15
of cosmic encounter is that
1:06:17
have not left director
1:06:19
and those encounters
1:06:21
could have also
1:06:23
occurred and undoubtedly have occurred
1:06:26
throughout they the holocene the
1:06:28
last ten thousand years in and
1:06:30
witnessed an experienced
1:06:32
hi human beings
1:06:34
those events then
1:06:36
the in coded into
1:06:39
the various stories and legends
1:06:41
and myths and so on and
1:06:44
now is to get better question about to geomagnetic
1:06:46
sealed surf okay the gym
1:06:48
magnetic field i believe that what
1:06:50
we're seeing as residual movement that's
1:06:53
an after effect of what this
1:06:55
the of the trauma this planet suffered between
1:06:59
ten and fourteen thousand years ago roughly
1:07:01
eleven and sit know said lebanon fifteen
1:07:03
thousand
1:07:06
richard with which bury my
1:07:08
now
1:07:09
you know you had over and over half
1:07:11
of north america buried under nice
1:07:14
at least as big baby bigger
1:07:16
than the one that now covers the south pole
1:07:19
and that is a huge mass of ice
1:07:22
you , around central canada ah
1:07:24
along hudson bay and in
1:07:26
manitoba neytiri which would have been that
1:07:28
the center of the that the dome of the great
1:07:31
i see it might have been a mile
1:07:33
and a half or two miles thick thick
1:07:35
was so tremendously heavy that it's
1:07:37
trust the the park
1:07:40
crust of the earth down several thousand
1:07:42
feet
1:07:43
because of the weight right
1:07:46
some force cause the rapids
1:07:49
melting cataclysmic melting of
1:07:51
that ice sheet over a very like
1:07:53
a geological instant and
1:07:55
all that weight has been released from the
1:07:57
continents
1:07:59
okay to the ocean basins now
1:08:03
that
1:08:04
shifting have tremendous amount of
1:08:06
mass round the surface of the
1:08:08
earth we now know had tremendous
1:08:11
seismic consequences of volcanic
1:08:13
consequences there were tremendous
1:08:16
earthquakes associated with
1:08:18
the d glaciation process in this huge
1:08:20
transference of so surface
1:08:23
mass
1:08:24
there are also would have been effects or
1:08:26
nearest orbital stability
1:08:28
in orbital equilibrium because
1:08:30
of the redistribution of the surface
1:08:33
mask with the release
1:08:35
of weight
1:08:37
in some parts of the planet in the increase
1:08:39
in waves on other parts you
1:08:41
had ice a static rebounds
1:08:44
going up in you had ice a static
1:08:46
pressure going down
1:08:49
those vertical shifts
1:08:51
are now out of equilibrium with
1:08:53
their latitude because
1:08:56
the mass of the earth which is not
1:08:58
perfectly rigid his poop has
1:09:00
more just greater mass distributed
1:09:03
towards the equator because
1:09:06
the years
1:09:07
the rotation on it's axis so
1:09:10
it's actually twenty six miles greater
1:09:13
this way
1:09:14
the east west the north to south
1:09:16
twenty six miles right now if you
1:09:19
start moving
1:09:20
archer the earth's crust which is
1:09:22
normally distributed from your
1:09:24
center of mass depending on it's latitude
1:09:27
okay you move outta here suddenly it's not
1:09:29
in the right latitude anymore you push you move
1:09:31
a doubt
1:09:33
the consequence of that is is in
1:09:35
order for the earth to to
1:09:37
read a quill operate itself there
1:09:40
needs to be lateral distribution
1:09:42
of earth crustal mass
1:09:45
as well as the to
1:09:47
his response to the staging vertical
1:09:50
movement right
1:09:53
all of that is then i think gonna
1:09:55
cause major tectonic
1:09:57
movements accelerated
1:09:59
in it'll drift if you will
1:10:02
there's gonna stars
1:10:04
rapid these destabilization of the earth's
1:10:06
magnetic field as a consequence
1:10:09
now this is not prove obviously
1:10:11
but i think that it's it's it's
1:10:13
a line of fruitful inquiry that
1:10:16
needs to be pursued what in terms
1:10:18
happened because given the
1:10:20
empirical data for huge earthquakes
1:10:23
huge volcanic eruptions
1:10:27
it seems very plausible
1:10:29
if not
1:10:32
probable
1:10:34
that there would have to be geomagnetic
1:10:36
consequences to that the
1:10:38
whole the glaciers and process so
1:10:40
much i tend to look at the
1:10:42
movements of the polls is we're still
1:10:44
seeing this oscillation that's probably
1:10:47
going to go on another ten thousand years
1:10:49
that is everything tried to get back into
1:10:51
some kind of equilibrium
1:10:54
the aftermath of those events
1:10:56
the
1:10:57
eleven to twelve to thirteen thousand years ago
1:11:00
that's , take on it this is fascinating
1:11:02
we'd like to talk about these ancient
1:11:04
cataclysms all mates we've
1:11:06
only got about twenty minutes left know and
1:11:08
i wanted to get to a little bit
1:11:10
of your take on the
1:11:13
ages modern humans humans
1:11:15
a we found evidence that and
1:11:17
remains that have been found over a hundred thousand
1:11:19
years old when the narrow yeah you know
1:11:22
is it is never gone that old
1:11:24
and you know they're finding evidence of even
1:11:26
older remains
1:11:29
a possibly have two million years old
1:11:31
and it's million you know it's insane the discoveries
1:11:33
that are coming out that proved
1:11:35
the age of humans is in
1:11:37
modern humans is humans lot older than we
1:11:39
think rain
1:11:40
i well
1:11:42
yeah i mean what's happening it's the it's
1:11:45
graeme had can talk likes to say things
1:11:47
keep getting older and older site and
1:11:50
that's certainly does apply that to humans
1:11:52
generally i mean i take this the oldest
1:11:55
modern human skeletons now are
1:11:57
dating to at least one hundred and eighty thousand
1:11:59
there's another ,
1:12:02
finding a finding the remains
1:12:04
of the skeletal remains of skeletal person that
1:12:07
would presumably be not
1:12:09
that much different from how
1:12:11
you are i look today dress
1:12:13
them up in a suit of modern close and put him out
1:12:15
on the street nobody would take any particular
1:12:17
notice album right modern
1:12:19
humans presumably was the same cranial
1:12:22
capacity in there for of same brain
1:12:24
size
1:12:26
presumably then with you know intellectual
1:12:28
capabilities and so on harboring
1:12:31
founded are you know hundred eighty possibly
1:12:34
two hundred thousand years old
1:12:37
now who's to say that what
1:12:39
we found is the oldest modern humour
1:12:41
you see
1:12:43
here again we have to we have
1:12:45
to go beyond the limitations of the
1:12:47
uniform material thinking because
1:12:50
in , last hundred and fifty to two hundred thousand
1:12:52
years to have clearly been multiple
1:12:54
catastrophes that have
1:12:56
occurred and each
1:12:59
catastrophe tends to dramatically
1:13:03
affect the consequences of
1:13:05
earlier catastrophes and earlier
1:13:10
earlier words that existed
1:13:13
read if i
1:13:15
marry could i can i
1:13:17
do a share screen
1:13:37
let's see around
1:13:45
right this
1:13:47
is present a very interesting graph
1:13:50
it's now
1:13:51
nearly a quarter century old and it's
1:13:54
still just as valuable today as
1:13:56
it was when it was first discovered
1:13:58
this is the oxygen isotope
1:13:59
oscillations in the greenland
1:14:02
ice cores
1:14:04
ice cores which which are direct
1:14:07
or proxy for climatic change
1:14:10
when you look at this graph years
1:14:13
you see the shifts to the left mean clue
1:14:15
cooling environment shifts to the right
1:14:17
mean warming environments we go
1:14:20
down the right him scale here this is
1:14:22
this is time
1:14:23
thousands of years so
1:14:26
this this present and down at the bottom
1:14:28
is ten thousand years ago
1:14:30
right and if you
1:14:32
go through here
1:14:33
one of the first things you gotta notices at no
1:14:35
point is this
1:14:37
the smooth large it's oscillating
1:14:40
one to three degrees constantly
1:14:43
throughout the holocene
1:14:45
and is is the holocene the last ten
1:14:47
thousand years which is now actually defined
1:14:49
as eleven thousand six hundred years ago
1:14:52
and
1:14:54
you see i mentioned earlier that there was a a
1:14:56
climate catastrophe at about eight thousand
1:14:58
three hundred years ago when it was a very rapid
1:15:00
dot doble global cooling indecency
1:15:03
, great hear it registered in
1:15:05
the greenland ice cores you
1:15:07
see that little spike greater than i'm yeah showing
1:15:09
with my rotates and that was
1:15:12
that drop of about four or five degrees
1:15:15
fahrenheit
1:15:18
almost instantaneously ah
1:15:21
the something like this happen now
1:15:24
it would put a very serious stress
1:15:27
on our global civilization it
1:15:30
would likely mean things like several
1:15:32
decades of really cold
1:15:34
years
1:15:36
associate with multiple crop failures
1:15:38
right since our food supply
1:15:40
depends upon
1:15:42
you know
1:15:43
an active agricultural industry
1:15:46
and so on if you had two or three years
1:15:48
of
1:15:50
crop failures we basically
1:15:52
the human species is pretty much run out of
1:15:54
so what'll happen
1:15:56
is as food yet stairs you
1:15:58
have salmon
1:15:59
ah people become
1:16:02
weeks their immune systems get compromised
1:16:05
and once you have a lot of people with him
1:16:07
compromised immune systems then
1:16:09
you get pandemics you get to
1:16:12
bonnie plague you get black flag et
1:16:14
cetera et cetera and a real pandemic
1:16:16
like i'm talking about their will
1:16:18
knocked out a third the population in
1:16:21
other words you go a given given cydia
1:16:24
given town province maybe
1:16:26
as as as to half the
1:16:28
people
1:16:29
the die
1:16:31
okay so what we're seeing here to
1:16:34
the constantly oscillating climate
1:16:36
two to three look right here see the spite
1:16:39
us about us about degree warming spike right
1:16:41
there
1:16:42
what cause their
1:16:43
well we don't know for sure but
1:16:46
one thing is clear it's not a smooth lot
1:16:48
right now one i've done
1:16:50
here is i've that
1:16:52
it in
1:16:53
some
1:16:55
alternating periods
1:16:56
the chameleon warmed to going best
1:16:59
route this holocene
1:17:01
in quite interesting when you begin to compare
1:17:03
what was going on historically
1:17:05
that's what was going on in terms of the
1:17:08
northern hemisphere climb
1:17:09
right same bras
1:17:12
there's vertical line
1:17:14
represents the body
1:17:17
the average to global temperature
1:17:19
right superimposed what you can
1:17:21
see here is the to the temperature at
1:17:23
least this is in greenland and it's probably
1:17:25
representative of the whole northern
1:17:27
hemisphere not necessarily
1:17:29
the whole planet uniformly
1:17:32
however most of these changes
1:17:34
were not strictly region
1:17:37
they were reflections of something that's going
1:17:39
on on a planetary levels but
1:17:41
just vertical line right here represents
1:17:44
the modern temperature you can see if
1:17:46
you come up this is
1:17:48
coming up this is what was called the holocene
1:17:50
warm period the climatic optimum
1:17:53
that i was mentioning earlier you know the south's
1:17:55
the climate here is all
1:17:58
to the right of this line this
1:18:00
is a time when sea levels were higher
1:18:02
than now he had the global
1:18:04
temperature was warmer than out
1:18:07
interrupted by that one spite and
1:18:09
then you can see it's were coming out
1:18:11
of the holocene warm period
1:18:14
the the magnitude of these oscillations
1:18:17
begins to increase as while
1:18:20
it also chefs over to the left the
1:18:22
culmination of the shifting to the left
1:18:24
side of the line
1:18:25
the little ice age new
1:18:28
, i've got the little ice age is
1:18:30
separated by a a two phases
1:18:32
the first space and the second phase
1:18:35
in between no spaces as the renaissance
1:18:38
at the beginning of the little ice age into thirteen
1:18:40
hundreds
1:18:42
if you had
1:18:43
that's what i started by get a succession of crop
1:18:45
failures between about thirty twenty
1:18:47
and thirteen forty the left
1:18:49
large portions of the population
1:18:52
hungry and week so you
1:18:54
then had famine and around
1:18:56
eighty grams or team forty two
1:18:59
you had the are the black players
1:19:01
that start
1:19:02
ah
1:19:03
that was that was so devastated european
1:19:06
populations but you can go back to
1:19:08
read you get to believe a warm period this
1:19:10
orange
1:19:11
bar right here is during the
1:19:13
great cathedral building
1:19:15
the rugged of europe ah the
1:19:17
great the final final phase of
1:19:19
the of the my in classical architecture
1:19:22
the basic architecture the
1:19:24
final wave of monumental
1:19:27
earthwork architecture north america
1:19:29
of legalistic building in england
1:19:31
right all of that in this orange bar during
1:19:34
the medieval warm period and what
1:19:36
what that was the fact that the warm period
1:19:38
we had a month extra growing season
1:19:40
every year in there was abundant food
1:19:43
and a huge growth in human population
1:19:46
during this warm periods so now there was
1:19:48
the labor force to to
1:19:50
undertake this tremendous enterprises
1:19:53
of sacred architecture and
1:19:55
there was enough food to feed them etc
1:19:58
you go back and you've got
1:19:59
period of cooling here that
1:20:02
was the dark ages then you
1:20:04
get back to
1:20:05
the classical greece and rome and warm
1:20:07
period with the rise of those civilizations
1:20:10
then you go back to a cooling period
1:20:12
right here and this was the bronze age collapse
1:20:16
and so it so don't the pyramid
1:20:18
age old kingdom of egypt sumer
1:20:21
ah another phase earlier
1:20:23
bronze age phase here's
1:20:25
the climatic optimum here
1:20:28
during nice and during this
1:20:30
climatic optimum was the recovery
1:20:32
of the planet after the disasters
1:20:35
of the terminal ice age it was the recovery
1:20:37
of human population and so
1:20:39
on
1:20:40
when i want you to look at disgrace
1:20:43
because this is where it gets really interesting
1:20:45
and it comes back to the question you asked
1:20:48
about you know we extend
1:20:50
the the tenure of human beings on this
1:20:52
planet back to one hundred fifty or two hundred
1:20:54
thousand years
1:20:58
i want you to look at the top portion
1:21:00
to this grass
1:21:02
the ten thousand years ago and now we get back
1:21:04
into the pleistocene
1:21:08
you see that
1:21:09
yeah yeah
1:21:12
well yeah wow was
1:21:14
right yeah that's a lot of movement
1:21:16
now you go back here's two hundred
1:21:18
thousand years so
1:21:21
we had ancestors for hundreds
1:21:23
of generations that lived
1:21:26
on the planet during while
1:21:28
this was going on wow
1:21:31
now you're be a challenge chris
1:21:34
take a band of intrepid coworkers
1:21:36
go back and try to establish civilization
1:21:40
now that on the left side that representing
1:21:43
the the cold
1:21:45
yeah with this phase okay yes
1:21:47
wow thirteen
1:21:49
look at this rate here look at this warm
1:21:51
global warming tweed like one
1:21:53
hundred twenty nine hundred and fifty thousand years
1:21:55
but she has nothing like look look look at this
1:21:58
look at this spite of warming here
1:22:01
this was that fourteen thousand six hundred
1:22:03
year of and and then you had
1:22:06
plunging back into full glacier told
1:22:08
you this point where you deserve the younger
1:22:10
driest boundary right here the
1:22:12
thousand nine hundred and their despite
1:22:15
of warming is meltwater pulse
1:22:17
one be interestingly
1:22:20
this has been dated to eleven thousand six
1:22:22
hundred years ago plato
1:22:24
identified this twenty five hundred years
1:22:26
ago in his prologue to to may
1:22:29
us would you talking about
1:22:32
the great kid catastrophe that destroyed
1:22:34
atlanta which he dated
1:22:36
nine thousand years before so lawns
1:22:39
exile to egypt which occurred around
1:22:41
six hundred bc so
1:22:43
interestingly that modern geological
1:22:46
sciences his place this pivot point
1:22:48
between the pleistocene analyses and
1:22:50
eleven thousand six hundred they read
1:22:52
identified a meltwater pulse
1:22:55
a spasm of the global meltwater into
1:22:57
the global oceans which would have meant a rapid
1:22:59
sea level rise and that is precisely
1:23:02
the date of plato game as two thousand five
1:23:04
hundred years ago so
1:23:07
right here this is the story that
1:23:09
we need to tell right here
1:23:11
yeah that's a great that those
1:23:13
shorts or greed or representations
1:23:16
of what has happened cataclysmic
1:23:18
wise and temperature wise
1:23:20
throughout our history that has changed
1:23:22
humanity and it's that's a really good
1:23:26
resource for people to take a look at absolutely
1:23:29
, absolutely it is now
1:23:31
we have time for for one more thing that i really
1:23:33
liked to cover before your we have to close
1:23:36
out for the nice i
1:23:38
would like to get your thoughts on the possibility
1:23:40
of mars having
1:23:42
an ancient civilization that was
1:23:44
destroyed by was major cataclysm
1:23:46
at some time in the ancient past
1:23:49
oh fuck up with while
1:23:51
dot that's quite a question that could
1:23:53
throw at me with her down to the will hire
1:23:56
well we get about ten fifteen minutes of oh
1:23:59
well you know i
1:24:02
i don't say yes i don't say no certainly
1:24:04
the history of mars
1:24:06
i'm very interesting story
1:24:08
and were just realizing how
1:24:11
how different bars used to be
1:24:13
i
1:24:15
the end or your if
1:24:17
i had to say humans on mars
1:24:21
or some such thing i would at
1:24:24
this point seats
1:24:27
there's digress when we began to look at
1:24:29
some of this mysterious evidence that
1:24:31
we didn't tartly even touch upon tonight
1:24:34
ah the the kind of stuff the graham hancock
1:24:36
gets into the idea that there was
1:24:38
a lot more going on in pre history than
1:24:41
we've
1:24:42
recognize now the graph that
1:24:44
i think that i just showed you i
1:24:47
think is is an indication of one reason
1:24:49
why we would not find the
1:24:52
evidence if somebody not take
1:24:55
our civilization that we've created under
1:24:57
planet today and stick it anywhere in
1:24:59
that three there
1:25:02
are ten thousand year ago greg from
1:25:04
the heart from the younger driest bat
1:25:07
windows oscillations are
1:25:09
five to ten times the magnitude
1:25:11
of what we've experienced the holocene take
1:25:14
our modern civilization modern civilization it anywhere
1:25:16
in there
1:25:18
the new know how much we're going to see of a today
1:25:21
then thousand twenty thirty forty fifty
1:25:23
thousand years later zip
1:25:26
we're not gonna see diddly squat
1:25:29
it would be completely lost in
1:25:31
that noise and so
1:25:33
the point is that we can't really
1:25:35
make any declare any to for definitive
1:25:38
the
1:25:39
claims about what may or may not
1:25:41
have been going back now bear
1:25:44
in mind that mind
1:25:45
when you're looking at this as compared to this
1:25:47
right that that were going back
1:25:49
eleven twelve thousand years ago
1:25:52
the gotta look at one hundred fifty thousand years it's
1:25:54
been collapse that's been compressed
1:25:56
vertically so
1:25:58
there could easily and and out
1:25:59
li war intervals
1:26:01
within those spikes of five
1:26:04
thousand perhaps ten thousand years
1:26:06
were civilizations could have arisen
1:26:08
have some kind well
1:26:11
if you look at the history of civilization
1:26:14
of the last five thousand years why do we see
1:26:16
wealth of the first civilizations i guess
1:26:18
you'd say that that got
1:26:20
any kind of a planetary presence were maritime
1:26:23
civilizations you know
1:26:26
the my knowledge the phoenicians right
1:26:28
the the ones that left architectural
1:26:31
ah
1:26:32
things a great stone the mega
1:26:34
lithic builders the egyptians building
1:26:36
the pyramids and so forth but when
1:26:38
you just consider the pyramids alone you
1:26:41
know i've gone into great detail on the geometry
1:26:43
of the pyramids and geodesy of the pyramids
1:26:46
and how it's i mean
1:26:48
i can say definitively that the great
1:26:50
pyramids aren't accurate representation
1:26:52
of the
1:26:54
scale of the northern hemisphere
1:26:57
the scale of forty three thousand two hundred to want
1:27:01
though
1:27:02
that ideas been dismissed by critics
1:27:05
look at it superficially seats while
1:27:08
you can anybody can play with numbers and come
1:27:10
up with something but the
1:27:12
which is correct
1:27:14
the point is though if you have a number
1:27:16
that has universal significance embedded
1:27:19
in the sumerian traditions the my and traditions
1:27:22
the biblical the
1:27:25
the basic traditions
1:27:27
then it's that core number
1:27:30
it provides the scaling ratio for
1:27:33
the pyramid
1:27:34
well that to me
1:27:36
makes it very difficult to just dismiss
1:27:38
it as as a mere coincidence
1:27:41
right so there
1:27:43
, many many examples
1:27:46
examples things that are out of context
1:27:48
in the very earliest phases of of human
1:27:50
civilization they are as we think
1:27:53
of it you know if we march the
1:27:55
rise of civilization
1:27:57
with the appearance basically appearance variety that's
1:28:00
what the history history is with
1:28:02
, with the appearance of right enough goes
1:28:04
back to heated sumer sumer
1:28:06
forty five hundred and five thousand years ago
1:28:09
but if we consider that
1:28:11
the first urban complexes where constructed
1:28:15
between eight nine thousand years ago
1:28:18
the in the first couple of millenniums
1:28:20
immediately following
1:28:23
the end of the great ice age if
1:28:26
we consider that to domestication of animals
1:28:30
with , the exception of dogs are
1:28:32
primarily took place post
1:28:34
glacial you know that
1:28:37
the know that of agriculture
1:28:39
and farming in those first
1:28:41
millennia or two posts glacial the
1:28:44
, of languages same thing
1:28:46
you can they traced back to our ten thousand
1:28:49
years ago well it
1:28:51
the old model is that
1:28:53
just as long continuum of of barbarism
1:28:57
of people never getting beyond the
1:28:59
the level love of our nomadic
1:29:01
hunter gatherers
1:29:03
tens of thousands of years and and suddenly
1:29:05
around ten thousand years ago steaks
1:29:08
begin to accelerate you begin to see cities
1:29:10
you begin to see agriculture you bmc domestic
1:29:12
animals you seeds language is spreading
1:29:15
over you see people spreading this
1:29:17
goes on for three four thousand years and
1:29:19
now so we've got the flowering of civilizations
1:29:22
four thousand five thousand years of civilization
1:29:24
and here we are
1:29:25
right while
1:29:27
i think
1:29:28
the word a position now to realize that
1:29:30
it's very possible that what we're seeing
1:29:33
posts glacial between eight and ten thousand
1:29:35
years ago might actually be the rebooting
1:29:39
of human civilization
1:29:43
and
1:29:44
when you realize like this picture
1:29:46
that's behind me years now
1:29:50
we'll have to do another one of these gristle really
1:29:52
like it into oh yeah this
1:29:54
, a four hundred foot cliff behind me here
1:29:57
and the other side of this side of four hundred
1:29:59
foot clear somewhere
1:30:01
around fourteen thousand years ago forty
1:30:04
million cubic feet per second of
1:30:06
water does through this
1:30:08
barely which at the time
1:30:10
was almost up to the level of these cliffs
1:30:14
well what your see here spend a single
1:30:16
event that ripped out four hundred
1:30:18
feet of bedrock along
1:30:20
the previous course
1:30:23
of the snake river in southern idaho now
1:30:26
let's suppose there was there a
1:30:29
vigorous burgeoning clovis community
1:30:31
living along the banks of the same of
1:30:33
the snake river fishing hunting
1:30:36
perhaps perhaps actually been building
1:30:39
things out of timber and logs and
1:30:41
you know
1:30:42
who knows getting what
1:30:44
kind of technological advances
1:30:46
they might have had maybe nothing that looks
1:30:48
like
1:30:49
fossil fuel driven civilization
1:30:52
with a lot of mechanistic things
1:30:54
machinery and cars
1:30:56
and airplanes and aldus although a
1:30:58
car is not going to last much more
1:31:00
than a century of put an old car on
1:31:02
the field and it's mostly rust away
1:31:05
you know in fifty years right okay
1:31:07
now you've got forty million cubic feet per
1:31:09
second of water that comes down this river valley
1:31:12
well whatever was
1:31:14
here going on under sources this river
1:31:16
before this blood completely
1:31:18
gone
1:31:20
the because you get this blood ripped out four hundred
1:31:22
feet of bedrock now you
1:31:24
consider that i in my podcast
1:31:26
cosmic raffia dot com i've had
1:31:28
multiple episodes from the joint were virtually
1:31:31
every river valley in north america his
1:31:33
head
1:31:34
gigantic floods in and
1:31:36
, course we can expand the not out
1:31:39
we talked earlier about tsunami see other
1:31:41
place that an obvious civilization
1:31:43
would arise would be along the coastlines
1:31:46
rights particularly if you've
1:31:48
got several
1:31:50
cultural centers or or urban
1:31:52
complexes forming a longer but the
1:31:54
cost lives it's the networks of trade
1:31:56
deformed it cause the city's oftentimes
1:31:59
to be built
1:31:59
while couple of bowl id backs
1:32:02
into the ocean say bye bye to those
1:32:04
coastal cities third on director
1:32:06
they're eliminated completely by
1:32:09
so the point is years we have to take
1:32:11
your time outdoor wait outdoor wait we can't make any
1:32:13
definitive claims about what may or
1:32:15
may not have happen
1:32:18
three glacial anti delusional
1:32:21
i say before the great floods that
1:32:23
ended the ice age and
1:32:26
we really need to rethink that and then
1:32:28
on top of that we have this massive
1:32:30
growing massive tantalizing information
1:32:33
that suggests that the almost
1:32:35
proclaims there's more to the story
1:32:38
i mean come on who's going
1:32:40
four hundred and eighty two foot tall
1:32:42
perfectly geometrically formed pyramid
1:32:45
seized in white polished white
1:32:47
limestone and what
1:32:49
that's gonna be built by subsistence
1:32:52
farmers on their time off ramey
1:32:55
it makes no sense
1:32:57
that's what we're gonna have to get to get into next
1:33:00
time is some of these ancient
1:33:02
, methods technologies
1:33:05
you know up paternal you
1:33:07
know energy technologies all these things
1:33:09
that the that go along with this that
1:33:11
are really want to talk about but yeah like you said
1:33:14
we barely scratch the surface of some of this stuff so
1:33:16
will definitely have to have you back on before
1:33:18
you go m let everyone know your website
1:33:20
is randall carlson dot com and your i'm
1:33:22
was the name of your podcast
1:33:24
cosmo graph year with a k cosmo
1:33:27
graffiti if all you gotta do is go to randall carlson
1:33:29
dot com and you'll get everywhere you need to go
1:33:32
and , partnering with this a new
1:33:34
internet platform called how to they're
1:33:36
just going to be hosting all of my video
1:33:39
content plus a lot of other stuff
1:33:41
that we're creating that we're there's going to be some amazing
1:33:43
content there and i'm i
1:33:45
think people need to check out how to with you're getting
1:33:47
frustrated with youtube and facebook
1:33:49
and things there are the great
1:33:51
alternatives that are beginning to emerge how to
1:33:53
has been three and a half years in the pipeline
1:33:56
of the development and it is
1:33:58
literally within one to two weeks
1:33:59
it's a rolling out so
1:34:02
to go to randall carlson dot com you'll
1:34:04
be able to
1:34:05
the lakes right over to how tubes
1:34:07
and i'll find out what's going on there tompkins
1:34:10
it sir
1:34:11
the gets going to be one of those
1:34:13
solutions for for this overbearing
1:34:15
censorship there were saying
1:34:18
i'll , mention that that's the only source
1:34:20
now for anything or authentically
1:34:23
randall i've authentically randall to run
1:34:26
this associate myself from the old website
1:34:29
my name and my or likeness is
1:34:31
still being
1:34:33
use their my ,
1:34:35
clinton is being sold but
1:34:37
dot it's not authorized
1:34:39
and authorized received nothing from the
1:34:41
sales of my content over there so
1:34:44
fair that in mind and anything you can get their
1:34:47
you're going to if you can't get it now at randall carlson
1:34:49
dot com you soon we'll be we're
1:34:51
going to be relaunching be relaunching
1:34:53
geometry classes in the near future
1:34:56
so save your money and get the upgrade
1:34:59
yeah we're definitely yeah
1:35:02
that sounds great and i'm like
1:35:04
you said a full schedule something for up
1:35:06
coming months maybe
1:35:08
, march possibly early march
1:35:10
that would be great in until
1:35:12
next time read oh thank
1:35:15
you so much for coming on fantastic information
1:35:17
the have an excellent evening
1:35:19
the great crusade enjoyed it
1:35:21
evidently start yet
1:35:24
and everyone else have an excellent evening and will
1:35:26
see you again tomorrow
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